Meanwhile, in the UK Entertainment One have the film scheduled for release on 23rd January 2015. The good news for UK viewers is that the BBFC have passed the film uncut.
Thursday, 7 August 2014
Roth's Green Inferno Release Delayed
Wednesday, 6 August 2014
Ninja Turtles - Saving Time
From what I hear, this is the best part of the new Ninja Turtles movie. I'll still check out the whole thing (can it really be worse than Secret of the Ooze?), but for those of you worried about life slipping mercilessly from your grasp, here is said clip.
Monday, 4 August 2014
Some More Movement on Rape Kit Backlog in the US
It only took a lawsuit, but it looks like the enormous rape-kit backlog is finally being taken seriously in Memphis. Hopefully more states will follow suit.
Sunday, 27 July 2014
Vice.com Declares that Sexual Harassment is Totally Fine
I thought the answer was probably (a) or (b), but according to Vice.com, it turns out that I might be wrong.
'Comic-Con, it turns out, isn’t exactly the safest place in the world to be a broad wearing a Sailor Moon outfit. In years past, many women have reported being groped, stalked and photographed without their consent at the event. A group called Geeks for CONsent (get it?) is demanding Comic-Con organizers take sexual harassment seriously by posting signs in the convention halls that tell dweebs to keep their hands to themselves.Comic-Con ain’t goin’ through with it, though, which makes sense. I mean, if all them broads who got their ruffled panties in a twist didn't want to be sexually harassed, they shouldn't have dressed like fictional characters from cartoons made for children. Y’know what I mean?'
Even if it is meant "ironically" - which would not make it much better - this 'women who dress like [x] deserve to be groped' s**t sounds like it came from the 1930s. Cutting edge, daring stuff Vice, well done. The "authors" Dave Schilling and Megan Koester should seriously consider never writing again.
Friday, 25 July 2014
Guinea Pig Remake: (Gore-Free) Photos
On set images from Stephen "Unearthed Films" Biro's upcoming remake of Guinea Pig, which is currently in production. Looks every bit as cheap as the original. I'm disappointed that the image below shows two women strapped down: what would have been wrong with replacing one with a male victim? I want some equality in torture, dammit! The "make the girlies scream" ethos is so last century...
I Have Seen the Future of Metal
...and it is these two kids. The guitarist is obviously awesome, but the singer is even better.
Wednesday, 23 July 2014
Offcom Press Release on ISP Filtering
Offcom have announced that only about 12% of new customers who were offered ISP-level filtering took up that offer. Apparently, blanket state censorship of adult Internet content is a minority interest.
Ofcom has today published a report for Government outlining measures the UK's largest internet service providers have put in place to help parents protect children from harmful content online.
This follows an agreement between the Government and BT, Sky, TalkTalk and Virgin Media, the four largest fixed line internet service providers (ISPs), announced in July 2013. Each ISP committed to offer new customers 'family-friendly network-level filtering' by the end of December 2013.
This is the second of three reports the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) has asked Ofcom to produce on internet safety measures to protect children. The DCMS asked Ofcom to look at the approach taken by each ISP to implement family-friendly filtering services which block content that may be inappropriate or harmful for children, rather than assess the effectiveness of the filters.
The report also describes measures taken by ISPs to present a pre-ticked 'unavoidable choice' to new customers on whether or not to activate the filter, and includes initial take-up data among new customers offered filters.
The filters apply to all web based internet content, on any device that is connected to the fixed broadband network in the home.
The report finds that the four ISPs now have a network level family friendly filtering service, which is offered to new customers. New subscribers receive a prompt from their ISP during the broadband set-up process, describing the filtering service and offering the consumer a pre-ticked option to use the filtering service.
The filters allow a user to manage access in their home to a range of internet services, helping parents to prevent their children accessing content that is not appropriate for them.
There are a number of filtering categories common to all four ISPs. Suicide and self-harm, pornography, file sharing, crime, drugs, violence and hate are covered by each provider's classification systems.
By the Government's target of December 2013, BT, Sky, and TalkTalk each offered a filtering service allowing parents to restrict categories of online content, and presented new users with the unavoidable choice of whether to activate the filters.
Virgin Media launched its network level filter in February 2014. When it launched, it was not able to implement an unavoidable choice for all new customers, and estimated this was offered to about a third (35%) of new customers. To help address this shortfall, Virgin Media implemented additional ways for the customer to choose filtering, after the initial set-up.
Next steps
The ISPs are currently working towards meeting their commitment to Government to contact all their existing customers and present them with an unavoidable choice about whether or not to install the family friendly content filters by the end of 2014.
Ofcom is due to produce the third in this series of reports in December 2014. This will review Ofcom's Media Literacy research from 2014 on parental strategies for protecting children online.
Specifically, it will look at how take-up, awareness of and confidence of parents in relation to parental controls has changed since its first report published in January 2014. It will assess the broader strategies parents may adopt to improve children's online safety and will provide a more complete set of data on which to draw clearer conclusions.
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